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High-risk smokers benefit most from CT screening for lung cancer


 

FROM THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE

"These observations argue for the use of individualized risk assessment of lung cancer death instead of the NLST entry criteria to increase the efficiency of low-dose CT screening. ... [T]ailoring of low-dose CT screening to a patient’s predicted risk of lung cancer death could narrow the NLST-eligible population without a loss in the potential public health benefits of screening or a disproportionate increase in the potential harms," they wrote.

Dr. Kovalchik and her colleagues noted that this screening technique was of limited efficacy in one important subgroup of smokers: those who had coexisting pulmonary disorders. Further study of the benefits and harms of low-dose CT screening in such patients is needed.

This study was funded by the National Cancer Institute. No relevant financial conflicts of interest were reported.

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